Advertisement

Blue Crab

Overfishing and deterioration of their habitat has stressed blue crab populations throughout much of their range.

Photograph by George Grall

Map

Blue Crab Range

Audio

Fast Facts

Type:

Invertebrate

Diet:

Omnivore

Average life span in the wild:

1 to 3 years

Size:

4 in (10.2 cm) long; 9 in (23 cm) wide

Weight:

1 to 2 lbs (0.45 to 0.9 kg)

Group name:

Cast

Did you know?

Female blue crabs mate only once in their lives.

Size relative to a tea cup:

The blue crab is so named because of its sapphire-tinted claws. Its shell, or carapace, is actually a mottled brownish color, and mature females have red highlights on the tips of their pincers.

Prized by humans for their sweet, tender meat, these wide-ranging, ten-legged crustaceans are among the most heavily harvested creatures on the planet. Their scientific name, Callinectes sapidus, means "savory beautiful swimmer."

Blue crabs are found in brackish coastal lagoons and estuaries from Nova Scotia, through the Gulf of Mexico, and as far south as Uruguay. Close relatives of the shrimp and lobster, these bottom-dwelling omnivores have a prickly disposition and are quick to use their sharp front pincers. Large males can reach 9 inches (23 centimeters) in shell width.

They feed on almost anything they can get hold of, including mussels, snails, fish, plants, and even carrion and smaller blue crabs. They are also excellent swimmers, with specially adapted hind appendages shaped like paddles.

Blue crabs are extremely sensitive to environmental and habitat changes, and many populations, particularly in the Chesapeake Bay in the eastern United States, have experienced severe declines. Blue crabs also play a key role in managing the populations of the animals they prey on, and constant overharvesting has had wide-ranging negative effects on the ecosystems they inhabit. For this reason, comprehensive management schemes are in place in several parts of the blue crab's range.